Guardian First Book Award reader nominations: The Hundred-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out of the Window and Disappeared by Jonas Jonasson (2024)

AggieH writes

Allan Karlsson crawled, as the Scandinavian titles more precisely have it, out the window and ran away from his old people's home just before his 100th birthday party was to start. Creaked away, rather, slightly weighed down by elderly joints and properly weighed down by a suitcase that he grumpily stole because his bus started to leave before the rude biker who asked him to watch it came back from the loo.

Now on the run from gangsters, the law and the nursing home's chief harridan, Karlsson acts cleverly and thinks drily as his fugitive life fills up with the interesting contents of the suitcase, a swearing red-head, a convicted murder, an elephant, a depressed chip shop owner, a variety of corpses and stolen transport, up to and including a railway track handcar.

Parallel to all this, Johansson takes us back through Karlsson's unexpectedly adventurous life. He spent decades drinking and thinking his way through life-changing (for them) meetings with historical figures including Richard Nixon; Kim II Sung and his 11-year-old son; Mao Tse-tung; everybody who thinks they invented the atom bomb (he really did, accidentally); Stalin; and Albert Einstein's clinically unintelligent younger brother.

All of which sounds absurd and all of which is, but in the best and traditional sense of the word. It's a farce and a fable. And as a fable should, it offers dark undertones including some delightful dictator-satire.

As Karlsson's down-to-earth character emerged and as various plot episodes were revolved, resolved and then revolved again, I was various reminded of Candide (response to a complex world: cultivate your beach garden); Pippi Longstocking (elephants as weapons) and Svejk (does Karlsson not understand the import of what happens in the world around him because he is too stupid or because he is too smart?).

Jonas Jonasson is an able, confident storyteller. Even Cervantes, and perhaps even Sancho Panza, might approve of Jonasson's ability to contrive multiple plot twists so brilliantly.

I was reminded more than once of Billy Connolly at the height of his digressive powers, when two hours after you'd entirely forgotten something he'd mumbled in passing, he suddenly referred to it again in a clever new context. (I was caught so unawares by a belated twist in the life of one of the biker gang 'Never Again' - even more culturally farcical in Scandinavian editions because it's 'Never Again' in English - that I was surprised into silence before I made the connection and roared laughing.)

Yes, the plot is entirely ridiculous, but only because Jonasson planned it that way in every deft detail. It's like the plot of The Marriage of Figaro: just suspend belief, enjoy the consequences, laugh aloud on cue and acknowledge the fact that no mortal will ever be able to recount the plot properly to anybody afterwards

And even though you do laugh aloud - not least at Karlsson's counter-intuitive approach to problem-solving, like standing outside the Bolshoi on a premiere night holding a placard up with his own name on it while hiding from the KGB - you will still pause for thought. In the opening pages, the ones that compelled me to read this book against my own will, the following made me pause and think about the strong bodies and strong wills that are unfairly hidden behind old age.

Karlsson, in his urine-splattered slippers, has taken an off-road shortcut in bid to get away before the nursing staff discover he's gone. Almost there, he meets a wall. (With apologies to the author, my amateur translation from Danish.)

"It was hardly more than a metre high, but Allan was a centenarian, not a high-jumper. Malmköping's bus and train station awaited him on the other side, and the old boy had just realised that this was where his shaky legs were taking him. Once, many years ago, Allan had crossed the Himalayas. Now that had been difficult. Allan thought about that, now, as he stood there faced with the final hurdle between him and the station. He thought so intensely about it that the stone wall in front him began to shrink down to almost nothing. And when it had shrunk down to its lowest point, Allan crawled over it, age and knees be damned."

alastairsavage writes

From the title, this appears to be merely the peripatetic adventures of a senior citizen. In fact, it's a black comedy that stretches across the chaotic life of care-home escapee Allan Karlsson.

Plotted with the same precision that Joseph Heller brought to Catch-22, the story is brilliantly deconstructed and reconstructed later in the novel. Yet, if the book is planned and ordered, the world it depicts is random and absurd. The 20th century is shown as a epoch dominated by ignorant, arrogant bullies. Major events occur not through the actions of the great figures of history but through drunken, half-forgotten conversations in the canteen.

Like all the great farces, it's really a tale about human folly and how people get caught up in the moment. All the great events of the 20th century seem petty in the light of the hero's advanced age. Jonasson's summaries of the causes of the first world war and the Spanish civil war have to be read to be believed.

The great mystery of the story lies in Allan Karlsson, the 100-year-old man himself. Who exactly is this slippery, mercurial character? Is he some kind of genius or just an ordinary guy who gets mixed up in events beyond his control? Allan also changes a great deal over the course of the book, so that it's difficult to reconcile his adolescent self with the subsequent events of his adult life. It's hard to tell whether we are supposed to treat him seriously, or just accept that anything is possible in this topsy-turvy world.

The Hundred-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out of the Window and Disappeared is a fun, breezy book that is crying out to be made into a road movie. It's also the perfect holiday read, except for the fact that you'll disturb your fellow plane passengers by laughing too much.

Jonasson is a master of comic timing, but praise should also go to translator Rod Bradbury. His crisp, clean translation reads very smoothly. It is strange that a publisher such as Hesperus that prides itself on translated fiction gives so little credit to his work (on my edition, his name only appears in a copyright line buried away on an insignificant page).

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Guardian First Book Award reader nominations: The Hundred-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out of the Window and Disappeared by Jonas Jonasson (2024)

FAQs

What is the plot of the 100 year old man who climbed out the window and disappeared? ›

Who was the 100 year old man who jumped out of a window? ›

The Hundred-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out of the Window and Disappeared is the bizarre and imaginative tale of centenarian explosives expert and vodka-lover, Allan Karlsson, who climbs out of his bedroom window at the old people's home on his 100th birthday and sets off with no set destination in mind.

Who was the 100 year old man who escaped? ›

After living a long and colorful life, Allan Karlsson finds himself stuck in a nursing home. On his 100th birthday, he leaps out a window and begins an unexpected journey.

Who turned 100 and jumped out the window? ›

The story is set in Sweden and is about the life and adventures of our hero Allan Karlsson who on his hundredth birthday climbed out the window of his old people's home and disappeared.

What happens in Book 1 of the 100? ›

Ever since a devastating nuclear war, humanity has lived on spaceships far above Earth's radioactive surface. Now, one hundred juvenile delinquents—considered expendable by society—are being sent on a dangerous mission: to recolonize the planet.

What happens at the end of the 100 book? ›

The book ends with a fire ravaging the Delinquents' camp. Thalia dies in the flame. Bellamy realizes that Octavia has gone missing right before the fire occurred. Clarke and Bellamy set out to find her.

Who has the saddest death in the 100? ›

The 10 Most Devastating Deaths in The 100, Ranked
  • 8 Harper and Monty.
  • 7 Abby.
  • 6 Marcus Kane.
  • 5 Finn.
  • 4 Bellamy.
  • 3 Maya.
  • 2 Lexa.
  • 1 Lincoln.
Nov 27, 2023

What happened to make after he jumped out of the window? ›

He was outwitted by the cleverer secret agent Ausable. Ausable, the quick-witted secret agent, made Max believe that there was a balcony below his windowsill. He also made him believe that the knockings at the door were made by the police.

What happened to Max who jumped out of the window? ›

Max was very nervous to find the police at the door. He went out of the window saying that he would wait in the balcony. He warned Ausable to send them away or he would shoot him. Max did not confirm the balcony and stepped out of the window and died.

Who wrote The 100 year old man who climbed out the window and disappeared? ›

The Hundred-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared (Swedish: Hundraåringen som klev ut genom fönstret och försvann), also known as The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared in the US, is a 2009 comic novel by the Swedish author Jonas Jonasson.

Who stayed on earth in the 100? ›

Octavia, Raven, Murphy, Emori, Indra, Gaia, Levitt, Jackson, Miller, Niylah, Echo, Hope, and Jordan have all chosen to live the rest of their lives with Clarke on Earth.

Who did not transcend on the 100? ›

Clarke is the only person who does not transcend. She walks the battlefield where many of the people have turned into soul trees. She is alone. She transports herself back to Sanctum, where she finds the dog Picasso as the only living being there.

Who wrote 100 year old man? ›

Where can I watch The 100 year old man who? ›

Watch it on Plex - Free Movies & TV, hoopla Digital, Tubi - Free Movies & TV, Philo, The Roku Channel, Prime Video, Fandango at Home or Apple TV on your Roku device.

What is the climax of the 100? ›

At the end of the series, the Dark Commander is permanently killed by Indra and humanity achieves Transcendence aside from Clarke who committed murder during the test. They find out the test isn't an actual war, but a way to join the alien hive mind, which is a peaceful universal consciousness that grants immortality.

What is the story of the hundred year house? ›

A haunted family and a haunted house... in reverse.

Doug is fascinated by the house's previous life as an artists' colony, and hopes to find something archival there about the poet Edwin Parfitt, who was in residence at Laurelfield in the twenties (and whose work happens to be Doug's area of scholarship).

What happens in Book 3 of the 100? ›

Summary. Weeks after landing on Earth, the Hundred have managed to create a sense of order amidst their wild, chaotic surroundings. But their delicate balance comes crashing down with the arrival of new dropships from space.

What happens in the 100 Book 4? ›

When hotheaded Bellamy and his analytical girlfriend Clarke discover that Wells, Octavia and Glass have been captured, they vow to get them back at all costs. But as they go after their new enemies, Bellamy and Clarke find themselves increasingly at odds, unable to agree on a plan to save their friends.

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